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Transportation Opt-in/Opt-Out Form
As we continue our summer transportation planning for our student’s return to school this fall to maximize route efficiencies, we are in need of your help!
From now until August 1 at 5 p.m., the District is asking all families to complete our new PK-10th grade Transportation Opt-in/Opt-out Form. Complete the form at the link here.
Voice Recognition
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EL Stages of Second Language Acquisition


Brief Explanation of 1-5 Composite Levels for Grades K-2:

Level 1 – Beginning  (previously 'Pre-functional' on OTELA) indicates that the EL student: 

  • may understand some isolated spoken words, commands, and questions, but often requires nonverbal cues and frequent repetition 

  • may speak or repeat common phrases and words and can ask one- to two-word questions 

  • demonstrates an understanding of concepts of print (left to right, top to bottom) and can follow one-step directions depicted graphically 

  • achieves written communication only through drawing pictures; may be able to copy letters or words successfully; or may form letters from memory but is unable to transmit meaning

Level 2 – Early Intermediate (previously 'Beginning' on OTELA) indicates that the EL student: 

  • understands short, simple oral statements on familiar topics; follows simple multi-step directions; requires frequent repetition and rephrasing 

  • predominantly uses formulaic speech patterns and memorized phrases; responds to questions with one- to two-word answers 

  • begins to identify the names of letters; begins to recognize the different functions of words; can follow multi-step directions depicted graphically 

  • achieves written communication through drawing pictures or dictating words; can revise or edit with teacher support; commits frequent mechanical errors

Level 3 – Intermediate indicates that the student who is limited English proficient: 

  • understands sentence-length statements and questions; understands main idea and some details from conversations and simple oral texts; is beginning to develop key vocabulary, interpret meaning, and understand some idioms 

  • restructures learned language into original speech; has limited vocabulary and marked errors in speech; can use language to retell, describe, narrate, question, and instruct, but not fluently 

  • comprehends single words and simple text, as well as simple sentence structure and simple compounding; recognizes the different functions of words, and that words have multiple meanings 

  • participates in writing activities with teacher support; writes simple and compound sentences; is beginning to write with phrases; uses transition words; can edit, usually with teacher support; most writing is descriptive, expository, procedural, or narrative

Level 4 – Early Advanced (previously 'Advanced' on OTELA) indicates that the EL student: 

  • understands most school/social conversations; grasps main ideas and relevant details; comprehends most grade-level vocabulary and idioms; is developing a wide range of vocabulary 

  • restructures language to communicate orally; uses connective devices; responds in a mostly coherent, unified, and sequenced manner; has sufficient vocabulary to communicate in most situations; is fluent but may hesitate or make errors in spontaneous communicative situations 

  • reads familiar text with little support, but needs support to comprehend unfamiliar text; identifies all story elements; is beginning to read across text types and apply knowledge to other activities 

  • participates in writing activities with minimal support; restructures known language in writing; writes mostly coherent, unified, and sequenced sentences; uses connective devices and a range of grammatical structures, with some errors; possesses a strong social vocabulary and a functional academic vocabulary; writes and edits all text types 

Level 5 – Advanced  (previously 'Full English Proficiency' on OTELA) indicates that the EL student: 

  • understands most grade-level speech, both social and academic; understands main ideas and relevant details at a level comparable to a native English speaker at the same grade level; has a broad range of vocabulary including idiomatic language 

  • responds orally in a coherent, unified, and sequenced manner; uses a variety of connective devices; understands and uses a range of simple and complex grammatical structures; has grammar and vocabulary comparable to a native English speaker at the same grade level 

  • participates in reading activities with little support; reads across text types; has an increasing range of social and academic vocabulary; understands multiple word meanings 

  • participates in writing activities with no teacher support; edits complex sentence structures with some errors; utilizes precise social and academic vocabulary